Google Adds Search Volume to Keyword Tool

Google announced yesterday evening that it was adding search volume numbers to its AdWords Keyword Tool. In addition to suggesting related keywords, the tool now includes the approximate number of monthly search queries for each keyword with sufficient data, and search volume for the most recent calendar month. “These approximate numbers are intended to provide better insight into keywords’ monthly and average search volumes than previously provided by the tool,” said Google’s Trevor Claiborne on the Inside AdWords blog.

The improvements to the Google Keyword Tool come just a couple of weeks after Yahoo! shut off its keyword suggestion tool. Yahoo!’s tool, a remnant of the old Overture system on which its search marketing product is based, had long included approximate search volume numbers. Yahoo! stopped officially supporting the app about 14 months ago, and indicated that the search volume figures were inaccurate as a result. Even so, because of the query numbers, the tool was viewed as a helpful piece of the search engine marketer’s arsenal until Yahoo! axed it last month.

Search query numbers are helpful for planning search marketing budgets, because you can judge approximately how much traffic is coming to each of your keywords and plan your total ad buy accordingly. But the new Google tool can be useful for other reasons — like market research. Check out the table of search volume for popular Javascript frameworks I made below, for example (draw from it what you will).

Framework Name

Approx. Search Volume

Prototype

368k

MooTools

201k

jQuery

165k

Scriptaculous

49.5k

Ext JS

49.5k

Dojo Toolkit*

3.6k

Qooxdoo

1.3k

Sproutcore

260

* Note: The term “Dojo” gets 460,000 searches, but, well, those could really be for anything.

The more transparent Google Keyword Tool comes shortly after the release of the AdPlanner tool, which shows approximate traffic volume for competitors’ web sites. (And in our tests, has generally been more accurate than Compete, Quantcast, Alexa, or other similar public traffic measurement tools.) That Google is opening up and sharing more of their vast stockpiles of web data is a win for all webmasters.

Josh Catone joined Mashable in May 2009 and is Executive Director of Editorial Projects. Before joining Mashable, Josh was the Lead Writer at ReadWriteWeb, the Lead Blogger at SitePoint, and the Community Evangelist at DandyID.

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Finally they provide raw numbers so I can stop using the Yahoo!/Overture keyword inventory tool… It’s about time!

Oh, and prototype can’t be anything either? Funny how you realize this with the name dojo but not prototype, a far more common word..

http://www.mockriot.com/ Josh Catone

@Anonymous: Good point! :) You’re right, it didn’t really even cross my mind. Then again, searches for “prototype” and “dojo” in Google actually have the respective JavaScript frameworks listed as the first results.

digiLan2005

This is great! Been waiting for this one for a long time.

Maurice Minor

Yeah great …. but the “Search Volume” numbers have now been removed! It now says “Insufficient Data” for everything.

Anyone got any ideas why this has happened?

Maurice (UK – Job / Recruitment Sites is my area of interest)

ripe

Google keyword tool is useless..

Guys here is an example: Type into google keyword tool: TRAVEL DEALS (country.. united states) you will find it says 37,200,000…this sounds great but then type in DEALS and the exact same number 37,200,000 comes up…Can anyone explain..